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Wavelength conversion at 10 Gb/s using a semiconductor optical amplifier | IEEE Journals & Magazine | IEEE Xplore

Wavelength conversion at 10 Gb/s using a semiconductor optical amplifier


Abstract:

Data at 10 Gb/s has been translated from an input signal wavelength to another wavelength, either longer or shorter, using gain compression in a 1.5- mu m semiconductor o...Show More

Abstract:

Data at 10 Gb/s has been translated from an input signal wavelength to another wavelength, either longer or shorter, using gain compression in a 1.5- mu m semiconductor optical amplifier for wavelength conversion. To achieve operation at such high bit rates, the probe (shifted) input must be intense enough to compress the gain of the amplifier significantly. This reduces the gain recovery time of the amplifier because of probe stimulated emission. A consequence of the intense probe is an extinction ratio deduction. Using moderate input powers, wavelength conversion is achieved over a 17-nm (2-THz) range, with 0.7-3-dB power penalties.<>
Published in: IEEE Photonics Technology Letters ( Volume: 5, Issue: 11, November 1993)
Page(s): 1300 - 1303
Date of Publication: 06 August 2002

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